Training someone to change the perceived gender of their own voice is a similar process to training them to speak with a new accent. I recently prototyped a gender-affirming voice therapy app for transgender women: https://own-voice-dev.netlify.app/
So now I’m curious if our two applications use the same approach under the hood! I have a detailed tech stack rundown on this page: https://own-voice-dev.netlify.app/#/info but in brief I use OpenVoice v2 to convert someone’s voice toward a differently-gendered reference voice, but leave it at only like 30%-60% transformed so it still sounds like them and not the reference. This transformed voice then becomes a practice reference for drilling.
I know it’s bad form to discuss that, but this is a completely normative comment, with no opinion given so far from being a flame. And it adds to the technical discussion!
Cool. Thank you for testing it. It can have multiple purposes. For people that want to do video presentations for instance and have a more native accent. Or yes, for a podcast. What do you think I should improve?
Training someone to change the perceived gender of their own voice is a similar process to training them to speak with a new accent. I recently prototyped a gender-affirming voice therapy app for transgender women: https://own-voice-dev.netlify.app/
So now I’m curious if our two applications use the same approach under the hood! I have a detailed tech stack rundown on this page: https://own-voice-dev.netlify.app/#/info but in brief I use OpenVoice v2 to convert someone’s voice toward a differently-gendered reference voice, but leave it at only like 30%-60% transformed so it still sounds like them and not the reference. This transformed voice then becomes a practice reference for drilling.
I’m surprised this comment was downvoted.
I know it’s bad form to discuss that, but this is a completely normative comment, with no opinion given so far from being a flame. And it adds to the technical discussion!
I am mostly using elevanlabs for this
Interesting, what's the purpose? Maybe, host a podcast without revealing your real voice?
I tried a few, I think the British American was maybe the best one. I didn't really notice a huge difference on Italian or Indian accent.
British - American https://pastewaves.com/player/25cacf64-461a-4eef-9b02-9bc0da...
A little shaky, but no doubt hints of a British Accent.
I went to a lot of work to adopt a “neutral” American accent, with some success. Perfectly adequate for casual conversations.
Why? You run across many people with accents every day, right? Well, it’s a problem; people definitely treat you differently.
This issue isn’t specific to the USA btw, it’s just I’ve been working in the USA for a long time.
Cool. Thank you for testing it. It can have multiple purposes. For people that want to do video presentations for instance and have a more native accent. Or yes, for a podcast. What do you think I should improve?
It looks cool, but how do I know this is not a front to capture people’s voice fingerprints for other sinister usage?